Thomas Bock arrived in Hobart in January 1824 having been sentenced to transportation for fourteen years. It is thought that Bock's reputation as an engraver and draughtsman preceded him to Hobart, which would explain why the colony's authorities put him to almost immediate use. Among his earliest Tasmanian works are bank notes engraved for the Bank of Van Diemen's Land and a drawing of the executed criminal, Alexander Pearce, made at the request of the Colonial Surgeon. During the 1820s he also engraved stationery, visiting cards, invitations and illustrations for publications such as the Hobart Town Almanack. After gaining a pardon in 1833 he became the most sought-after portraitist in the colony, producing numerous portrait drawings for respectable colonists throughout the 1830s and 1840s. This work is believed to be a portrait of free settler Jessie Whyte (née Walker, 1779–1864), whose son-in-law, businessman and landowner William Robertson, was one of Bock's patrons. Bock also produced oil paintings, and was one of the first practitioners of photography in Tasmania.
Purchased 2017
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